Kabarett mit Aliosha Biz
Aliosha Biz was born in Moscow at a very young age. Like all Soviet children, he had to help with the potato harvest and play the violin. When this barely tolerable childhood was over, Aliosha said to himself one day: I would actually prefer to live in Vienna, where my grandparents were born, and on the evening of the same day he got off the train at the southern railway station (eastern part).
As he didn't understand anything the people around him were saying, because they certainly didn't speak German, he immediately decided to become a cabaret artist in order to study the customs and traditions of the native Austrians. And just 30 years later he became one. He entertains his audience with bizarre Russian-Jewish stories, has ominous oligarchs appear as string-pullers in local politics and explains how Eastern Europeans learn to speak Tyrolean dialect. He also plays the violin. If he wants to.
As he didn't understand anything the people around him were saying, because they certainly didn't speak German, he immediately decided to become a cabaret artist in order to study the customs and traditions of the native Austrians. And just 30 years later he became one. He entertains his audience with bizarre Russian-Jewish stories, has ominous oligarchs appear as string-pullers in local politics and explains how Eastern Europeans learn to speak Tyrolean dialect. He also plays the violin. If he wants to.